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Top Twelve Foods for Long Term Storage

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  • Top Twelve Foods for Long Term Storage

    Short version: Jarred raw nut butters, canned tomatoes, canned beans, canned sardines, brown rice, spelt flour, popcorn, dried peas, raw milk cheese, grass fed beef, free range chicken and miso soup.
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    Preparing for Climate Chaos & Peak Oil: The Top Twelve Foods for Long Term Storage
    By Neil McLaughlin
    Naturalnews.com, August 28, 2008

    Top 4 Packaged Foods to Store (Indefinite shelf life)

    1) Jarred Raw Nut Butters - Sesamum indicum (Pedaliacea), Arachis hypogaea (Fabaceae) Having peanut butter, almond butter and sesame tahini (sesame seed butter) will provide for many recipes and a concentrated protein source that is easy to prepare. $5.00 per pound.

    2) Canned Tomatoes - Solanum Lycopersicum (Solanaceae) The amount of Lycopene, the key phytonutrient in tomatoes, actually becomes more bioavailable when they are canned. Canned tomatoes can be used to make homemade pasta and pizza sauce along with chili. $1.25 per pound.

    3) Canned Beans - Cicer arietinum (Faboideae), Phaselous vulgaris (Leguminosae) Having cans of black beans, red beans, chili beans and garbanzo beans handy supports a variety of complementary sources of complete protein (when served with rice). Garbanzo beans are the key component of hummus. They are available in extra large 25 ounce cans and even 108 ounce cans. $1.15 per pound.

    4) Canned Sardines - Harengula jaguana (Clupeidae) (Unsalted, in Spring Water) Sardines are whole organisms with lots of healthy Omega-3 oil. Sardines offer a complete protein source along with trace minerals. The healthiest ones still have the bones. Small fish like sardines contain far less mercury than tuna. $2.00 per pound. ______________________________________

    Top 4 Bulk Grains to Store (2 year shelf life)

    1) Brown Rice - Oryza sativa (Poaceae) A staple grain, brown rice is cheaper than white rice and while it doesn't taste as good it is a health food versus a junk food. A blend of brown and white rice is the ideal for both health and flavor $1.25 per pound.

    2) Spelt flour - Triticum spelta (Poaceae) Having the ingredients to make bread dough will provide for many recipes. It is important to keep flour sealed in water tight containers to keep out moisture and insects.

    3) Popcorn - Zea Mays Everta (Poaceae) Cooked on the stove top, fresh popcorn beats any snack from a bag and is a great source of fiber. Ideally one will buy organic as popcorn is one of the most pesticide-laden foods and might be GMO corn. Store in air tight containers to preserve freshness and keep out bugs. See recipe below. $1.26 per pound.

    4) Dried Peas - Pisum sativum (Papilionaceae) Dried peas are a great source of protein and if mixed with rice provide a balanced meal.

    NOTE: Bulk rate is for 25 lb bag. Store grains in sealed containers or they will become host to bugs. Observe grains carefully before using.
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    Top 4 Protein Sources to Store (6-12 month shelf life)

    1) Raw Milk Cheese from Grass Fed Cows - Bos taurus (Bovidae) Raw milk cheese gets better with time and is a complete food, meaning you could survive and thrive consuming absolutely nothing but raw milk cheese! It should be aged 60 or more days. Buy it in one big piece if possible, and keep it at about 44-48 degrees (F). Keep an eye on mold growth, and if small spots develop just scrape them off. If the cheese has come in contact with plastic it should be scraped off as it will absorb the taste and chemicals in plastic. $8 per pound.

    2) Grass Fed Beef and Lamb - Bos taurus (Bovidae), Ovis aries (Bovidae) If purchased in bulk grass-fed beef costs as little as $3 per pound and lamb for as little as $5.25 per pound. It can be canned, frozen, or divided up. The bones are even cheaper and can be used to make nutrient dense stock. See the product review for Grass fed Beef and Lamb for details on buying meat in bulk. $3-$20 per pound.

    3) Free Range Chicken - Gallus domesticus (Thesienidae) Whole chickens with the organs are essential for providing long term health via chicken soup. They keep for long periods in the freezer. They can provide several different meals. For quality chicken, the lard is useful, and the skin is healthy to consume. Chickens can be stuffed with leftover (dried) bread scraps, the chicken organs fortify the gravy with nutrients, and the bones can be made into soup. Not to mention the meat itself. Leftover bone scraps can be composted or ground up for pet food.

    4) Miso soup - Glycine max (Fabaceae) Miso soup is extremely concentrated and provides a great source of protein. Miso is a fermented food that contains living enzymes. One or two tablespoons of miso paste make a whole pot of soup.

    Full article:
    The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918

  • #2
    Re: Top Twelve Foods for Long Term Storage

    Thank you mixin. I have never heard of miso soup. Another google search....

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Top Twelve Foods for Long Term Storage

      Originally posted by mixin View Post
      Short version: Jarred raw nut butters, canned tomatoes, canned beans, canned sardines, brown rice, spelt flour, popcorn, dried peas, raw milk cheese, grass fed beef, free range chicken and miso soup.
      ------------------------------------------------------------------
      Preparing for Climate Chaos & Peak Oil: The Top Twelve Foods for Long Term Storage
      By Neil McLaughlin
      Naturalnews.com, August 28, 2008

      Top 4 Packaged Foods to Store (Indefinite shelf life)


      3) Free Range Chicken - Gallus domesticus (Thesienidae) ......the chicken organs fortify the gravy with nutrients, and the bones can be made into soup. Not to mention the meat itself. Leftover bone scraps can be composted or ground up for pet food.

      4) Miso soup - Glycine max (Fabaceae) Miso soup is extremely concentrated and provides a great source of protein. Miso is a fermented food that contains living enzymes. One or two tablespoons of miso paste make a whole pot of soup.

      Full article:
      http://www.organicconsumers.org/arti...icle_14427.cfm

      I would not want to feed ground up chicken bones to my pets as chicken bones have a tendency to splinter into needle like shards. Determining if the chicken bones are ground up fine enough during an emergency could be a problem to a pet owner doing it for the first time. I would be afraid the bones may cause serious harm to my pet's intestinal track and would want to ask to my vet about this BEFORE doing it. As to the cooked chicken: meat, organs and broth? Well I'm sure my family and pets could make it disappear in short order.

      I really like miso for breakfast. I take about one teaspoon mix it with some cool unchlorinated water and then mix in some hot water from the tea pot (enough to make about a cup of water total). This helps to ensure that the good bacteria is not killed. I also have used it for flavoring vegetable soup stock. I dissolved it with water before adding it to the stock because miso can be very salty and biting into a hunk of it can be unpleasant.
      We were put on this earth to help and take care of one another.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Top Twelve Foods for Long Term Storage

        Amish Country,
        Thanks for bringing the chicken bones issue to our attention. I never feed them to my cats and am really surprised at the number of people I see feeding them to their dogs. They usually give me the comment: "Well, I've been doing that for years and it hasn't hurt them yet." I think some of the raw food advocates consider feeding raw chicken wings to animals safe.
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        Now, for those of us who have never heard of miso:

        The salty taste and buttery texture of miso, a fermented soybean paste originating in Japan, is becoming increasingly popular in the West as a versatile condiment for a host of different recipes. Once only found in specialty stores, miso is available year round in many local supermarkets.

        Although miso is usually made from soybeans, it can also be produced from rice, barley or wheat by adding a yeast mold (known as "koji") and other ingredients that are allowed to ferment. The fermentation time, ranging from weeks to years, depends upon the specific type of miso being produced. Once this process is complete, the fermented ingredients are ground into a paste similar in texture to nut butter.

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        The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918

        Comment

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